Am Freitag 12 September 2008 13:18:02 schrieb ext Hinko Kocevar:
> When I create a new user on my machine the user belongs to its own group -
> and not the group 'users'. Also when creating directory the user creates it
> with its group name instead of users group. How can this be fixed, so that
>
On Friday 12 September 2008 13:18:02 Hinko Kocevar wrote:
> Hi,
>
> When I create a new user on my machine the user belongs to its own group -
> and not the group 'users'. Also when creating directory the user creates it
> with its group name instead of users group. How can this be fixed, so that
>
2008/9/12 Hinko Kocevar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Hi,
>
> When I create a new user on my machine the user belongs to its own group -
> and not the group 'users'. Also when creating directory the user creates it
> with its group name instead of users group. How can this be fixed, so that
> user belo
Hi,
When I create a new user on my machine the user belongs to its own group - and
not the group 'users'. Also when creating directory the user creates it with
its group name instead of users group. How can this be fixed, so that user
belongs to users group by default and hence all the files it
Bummer!
Thanks, guys.
Tony
Dan LaMotte wrote:
> You can do
>
> % newgrp
>
> and the shell that it is executed in will then show the change.
>
> % groups
>
> will prove that you are in the group currently.
>
> But in order for new terminals that you spawn from an X session to have
> the new
You can do
% newgrp
and the shell that it is executed in will then show the change.
% groups
will prove that you are in the group currently.
But in order for new terminals that you spawn from an X session to have
the new group you must log out and log back in. That is correct.
# - dan lamot
On Tuesday 11 April 2006 12:57, Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
> Maybe I'm not doing something right. From KDE's konsole, I invoked a
> new shell with "bash -l" and then ran "id" but it did not reflect the
> new group.
No you did nothing wrong. I double checked it and it's as I feared. You have
to lo
Zac Slade wrote:
> On Tuesday 11 April 2006 01:34, Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
>
>>I sometimes have to add my user to a group. This of course doesn't take
>>effect until I log out and back in. However, if I'm under X, I can't
>>logout without first exiting X.
>>
>>So, I'm wondering if there is any
On Tuesday 11 April 2006 01:34, Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
> I sometimes have to add my user to a group. This of course doesn't take
> effect until I log out and back in. However, if I'm under X, I can't
> logout without first exiting X.
>
> So, I'm wondering if there is any way to re-log the user
I sometimes have to add my user to a group. This of course doesn't take
effect until I log out and back in. However, if I'm under X, I can't
logout without first exiting X.
So, I'm wondering if there is any way to re-log the user without exiting X?
Tony
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